For newer traders learning futures, this is a really useful example 👇
$ENJ dropped hard (-18%… yeah, rough move)

And this is usually the moment where trading feels hardest, because both sides start sounding tempting:
“It’s already down… maybe I should short”
“It’s too cheap… maybe I should long”

That’s exactly why moments like this are worth studying. So… What the chart is actually showing…

If you slow it down, a few things stand out:

- Strong downtrend (lower highs)
- Momentum still weak
- Stoch RSI oversold… but no real bounce yet

So this isn’t really a clear signal yet.
It’s more like price pausing after a heavy move.

⚠️ Two common beginner mistakes

- Shorting after most of the move is already gone
- Assuming oversold automatically means reversal

Both happen a lot, especially when a chart starts to feel urgent.

What can be more helpful to wait for?
Instead of guessing, it helps to let price show a bit more:

- If price bounces into resistance and rejects > that can support a short idea
- If price starts building a base and breaks structure upward > that can support a long idea

Until then, it may just be a wait-and-watch area.

Simple rule: If the question is “Should I long or short here?”
Sometimes the best answer is:
- neither, not yet

One of the biggest lessons in futures:
Patience matters more than people think.

A lot of progress comes from learning:
not just how to enter,
but how to avoid forcing a trade when the chart still needs to develop.

$ZEC
$RAVE